The Tongues of Italy: Prehistory and HistoryHarvard University Press, 1958 - 465 pagine Through the centuries, Italy has received many cultures from lands around the Mediterranean and beyond the Alps, which either superseded prevailing Italian cultures or were absorbed by them. But the result is always a mixture. The linguistic evolution of Italy parallels this development, and presented as part of the cultural history it beomes a colorful and exciting tale.--dust jacket. |
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Pagina 199
... Italici . There is no reason why this should not be permissible , not only because we are free to choose our own terminological conventions , but also because Italici is sanctioned by tradition in the sense of non - Latin - speaking ...
... Italici . There is no reason why this should not be permissible , not only because we are free to choose our own terminological conventions , but also because Italici is sanctioned by tradition in the sense of non - Latin - speaking ...
Pagina 219
... Italici . When von Duhn speaks of Italici he means persons not only united by their linguistic heritages but also ethnically or racially related , people who came to Italy in two distinct migrations , but as fully formed units , from ...
... Italici . When von Duhn speaks of Italici he means persons not only united by their linguistic heritages but also ethnically or racially related , people who came to Italy in two distinct migrations , but as fully formed units , from ...
Pagina 220
... Italici , in inhuming territory ; yet Oscan is more closely related to Umbrian than it is to Latin , and Latin and Umbrian are quite different from one another . On their way south , the inhuming Italici , especially since the theory ...
... Italici , in inhuming territory ; yet Oscan is more closely related to Umbrian than it is to Latin , and Latin and Umbrian are quite different from one another . On their way south , the inhuming Italici , especially since the theory ...
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Parole e frasi comuni
Adriatic Altheim ancient Apennines Apulia archaeological became Bronze Age called Campania century B.C. CHAPTER Charlemagne civilization Classical Latin colonies course cremation Dante Devoto dialects of Italy east emperor especially ethnic Etruria Etruscan Europe European evidence fact foreign Gaul Germanic Greek guage Hence idioms Illyrian important Indo Indo-European dialects Indo-European languages inhabitants inhumation inscriptions invaders invasion Iron Age Iron Age cultures Italian Italic Italici Keltic Krahe Kretschmer land Langobards later Latinian Latium least Ligurian linguistic linguistic history Mediterranean Messapic migration modern Moslems native neolithic northern origin Oscan Ostrogoths palaeolithic Pallottino Patroni peninsula period political pope population prehistoric Proto-Indo-European provinces race racial Raetic Randall-MacIver records region Roman Empire Romanic languages Rome scholars Sicily social southern Italy speak speakers of Indo-European speech spoken substratum term terramare Terramaricoli theory tion tribes Tuscan Umbrian Venetic Villanovan culture Visigoths Vulgar Latin Whatmough 1937 written